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Opinion Polling

Opinion Polling. How We Form Political Opinions. Personal Belief s. Political Knowledge. Cues From Leaders. Political Opinions. Opinion Polls. Polls are interviews or surveys of a sample of citizens used to estimate how the public feels about an issue or set of issues.

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Opinion Polling

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  1. Opinion Polling

  2. How We Form Political Opinions Personal Beliefs Political Knowledge Cues From Leaders Political Opinions

  3. Opinion Polls Polls are interviews or surveys of a sample of citizens used to estimate how the public feels about an issue or set of issues.

  4. Early Efforts to Influence and Measure Public Opinion • Public opinion polling as we know it today developed in the 1930s. • As early as 1824, newspapers have tried to predict election winners using polls. • Literary Digest used straw polls that are now seen as highly problematic. • The American Voter was published in 1960 and continues to influence the way we think of mass attitudes and behavior. • This book studied the 1952 and 1956 presidential elections and discussed how class coalitions led to party affiliation.

  5. How We Measure Public Opinion In order for a poll to be reliable, it must have: • Proper question wording • An accurate sample • contacting respondents – Since 95% of Americans have phones, random phone calling would be a valid method.

  6. Sampling Techniques • Representative Sampling - To accurately predict the whole based on only a sample, the sample must be representative. • Sample of interviewees should reflect population as a whole • Randomness - A purely random sample will be representative within the stated margin of error. • every person in the defined population has to have an equal chance of being selected • The larger the sample of the population, the smaller the margin of error • quota sampling: researchers decide how many persons of certain types they need in the survey: ex. minorities, women, or farmers • Within the categories, the sample may be nonrandom and therefore biased. • The Importance of Accuracy - interview about 1500 individuals to measure sentiment of 200 million American adults • Their results have a high probability of being correct—within a margin of three percentage points—and they have had some notable successes in accurately predicting election results.

  7. Problems with Polls • Sampling Errors: the difference between a sample’s results and the true result if the entire population had been interviewed. • The sample is too small • Do not know how to correct for common biases in samples. • Poll Questions: The design of a question can affect the result. • Yes/no answers are a problem if the issue admits to shades of gray • Often, people will attempt to please the interviewer • Push Polls: attempts to spread negative statements about a candidate by posing as a pollster and using long questions containing information about the opposition • Both candidates and advocacy groups use push polls.

  8. How We Measure Public Opinion • In general, do not trust a poll that does not tell you the question wording, the sampling method, and the ways in which respondents were contacted. • Reputable pollsters will also tell you the number of respondents (the 'n') and the error rate (+ or - 5%). • Any poll that tells you to call 555-5554 for yes and 555-5555 for no is unscientific and unreliable. This is not a random sample at all!

  9. Types of Polls • Tracking polls--continuous surveys that enable a campaign to chart its daily rise and fall in popularity. These may be a decent measure of trends. • Exit polls--polls conducted at polling places on election day. • Deliberative polls--a new kind of poll first tried in 1996. A relatively large scientific sample of Americans (600) were selected for intensive briefings, discussions, and presentations about issue clusters including foreign affairs, the family, and the economy. • A deliberative poll attempts to measure what the public would think if they had better opportunities to thoughtfully consider the issues first.

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